Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Chapter 1 The war-time economy, 1939–1945
- Chapter 2 Failure followed by success or success followed by failure? A re-examination of British economic growth since 1949
- Chapter 3 The performance of manufacturing
- Chapter 4 A failed experiment: the state ownership of industry
- Chapter 5 Employment, education and human capital
- Chapter 6 Money and monetary policy since 1945
- Chapter 7 The financial services sector since 1945
- Chapter 8 Economic policy
- Chapter 9 The welfare state, income and living standards
- Chapter 10 The rise of the service economy
- Chapter 11 Impact of Europe
- Chapter 12 Technology in post-war Britain
- Chapter 13 Regional development and policy
- Chapter 14 British fiscal policy since 1939
- Chapter 15 Industrial relations and the economy
- References
- Index
Chapter 12 - Technology in post-war Britain
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 28 March 2008
- Frontmatter
- Chapter 1 The war-time economy, 1939–1945
- Chapter 2 Failure followed by success or success followed by failure? A re-examination of British economic growth since 1949
- Chapter 3 The performance of manufacturing
- Chapter 4 A failed experiment: the state ownership of industry
- Chapter 5 Employment, education and human capital
- Chapter 6 Money and monetary policy since 1945
- Chapter 7 The financial services sector since 1945
- Chapter 8 Economic policy
- Chapter 9 The welfare state, income and living standards
- Chapter 10 The rise of the service economy
- Chapter 11 Impact of Europe
- Chapter 12 Technology in post-war Britain
- Chapter 13 Regional development and policy
- Chapter 14 British fiscal policy since 1939
- Chapter 15 Industrial relations and the economy
- References
- Index
Summary
INTRODUCTION
Technology had been an area of sporadic governmental concern for several centuries, but after the Second World War it moved nearer the centre-stage of thinking in both public and private domains. This growth of interest in, and concern about, technology was driven by a number of factors, none of which was new but all of which were accentuated. First was the growing complexity of technology, associated in part with extending links with the science base and in part with the advent of new technological fields. Second was the impact of ‘globalisation’, which helped to place technology at the forefront of the ‘competitiveness agenda’ in the economic domain. And third were the intensifying public anxieties about unchecked technological proliferation and potentially adverse environmental impacts, which led to demands for tighter control and regulation. In various ways, each of these brought about a widening consciousness of technology among the people of Britain.
Though concerns and anxieties were to grow in the second half of the twentieth century, technology had emerged from the war with a high reputation: in the military, in government and in the public at large. Initial excitement over how atomic bombs had brought a speedy end to the war in the Pacific led not only to enlarged testing programmes for nuclear weapons, by the UK as well as other leading military powers, but also to General Eisenhower’s call for ‘Atoms for Peace’, and nuclear power that would prospectively generate electricity that was to be ‘too cheap to meter’. Computers that had been first developed to analyse the ballistics of rockets could be harnessed for a wider range of scientific calculations, and perhaps other purposes.
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- The Cambridge Economic History of Modern Britain , pp. 299 - 331Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2004
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